It’s Official: The U.S. Recession Began in February

preview_player
Показать описание
The record-long U.S. expansion ended in February, according to the academic panel that serves as the arbiter of America’s business cycles, putting an official date on the start of the coronavirus-induced recession.

“The committee has determined that a peak in monthly economic activity occurred in the U.S. economy in February 2020,” the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Business Cycle Dating Committee said in a web statement on Monday. “The unprecedented magnitude of the decline in employment and production, and its broad reach across the entire economy, warrants the designation of this episode as a recession, even if it turns out to be briefer than earlier contractions.”

Coronavirus ends longest-running U.S. economic expansion
The NBER said the past expansion lasted 128 months, the longest in the history of U.S. business cycles dating back to 1854. Its statement hinted that the downturn could be shorter than usual, with signs of recovery already evident, including an unexpected gain in jobs last month. If that continues, the recession could be dated to last only a few months.

Later Monday, the S&P 500 erased its 2020 loss as U.S. stocks rallied on optimism around the easing of lockdowns and reopening of the economy.

“It does seems like there has been an improvement in the economy since mid-April,” said James Stock, a Harvard University economist and committee member. “What happens going forward depends on policy, specifically epidemiological policy, and on the course of the virus.”

Stock said he’s worried that a “second wave” of infections could hurt any recovery and lengthen a downturn, which would have the result of turning short-term unemployment into long-term joblessness, with a wave of bankruptcies. Some economists worry the recovery won’t be robust, just as the 10-year expansion was muted following the financial crisis.

“Technically, the recession could be over, making it the deepest and shortest on record,” said Ryan Sweet, head of monetary policy research at Moody’s Analytics. “Even though growth has resumed, marking a technical end to the recession, for a large number of businesses and individuals, it’s going to feel like a recession for years to come.”

Many economists informally define a recession as two negative quarters of gross domestic product. The bureau doesn’t use that definition and instead looks for a significant decline in economic activity, typically lasting more than a few months. In the case of the latest downturn, the depth of the decline outweighed its brevity.

“The committee weighs the depth of the contraction, its duration, and whether economic activity declined broadly across the economy,” the NBER said. “The committee recognizes that the pandemic and the public health response have resulted in a downturn with different characteristics and dynamics than prior recessions.”

Committee members said the depth of the downturn -- with a record drop in employment -- made the call easier to make without a lengthy delay for deliberations. Typically, it’s taken the committee six to 18 months following a peak to declare a recession.

“All of our decisions involve a painstaking review of all the relevant data, including this one,” said Robert Hall, a Stanford University professor who leads the committee. “The decline in economic activity starting in March was huge.”

Harvard’s Stock said, “in this case, the peak was clear, from nearly all indicators.” The “profound depth” of the decline makes it clearly a recession “even if the duration is as short as two months -- a theoretical possibility -- although we might not know the actual trough for quite a while, there are so many special factors affecting the data.”

The committee commented on the possible brevity of the recession, not to conclude it’s over but to emphasize the NBER would be comfortable with the call even if the downturn is very short, said James Poterba, NBER president.

“The committee doesn’t have a crystal ball and the statement was not making any forecast,” he said.

QUICKTAKE ON SOCIAL:

QuickTake by Bloomberg is a global news network delivering up-to-the-minute analysis on the biggest news, trends and ideas for a new generation of leaders.
Комментарии
Автор

Some times I just feel like you guys love and enjoy to report about bad things like this.... I don't know, it feels like you want it to happen. Maybe I'm wrong, I don't know....

fromcubawithlove
Автор

What month are we now? February or June

maemae
Автор

Don't worry, we bailed out the ruling class, I know that's the opposite of who countries normally support during a recession, but I'm sure there'll be no terrible consequences for that, right? Guys?

oAvalono
Автор

Been trading with Martin Williams for months now. You can count on his good signals and strategies to enable you make profit on cryptocurrency trade.

nilskemmer
Автор

Seems like if trump actually acted on the pandemic before it got out of hand, none of his would have happened ;)

Arkhunter
Автор

Lmao so why has my current stock price rose over 270% across my portfolio since april

nenZchrme
Автор

This is bull. They changed the rules....the quarter has not ended yet. I find it funny after the positive job report they decided to call it a recession a few days later.

mrlazynoodles
Автор

It's a depression. But nobody will take anything from this earth. Everyone will die even the very rich....

blancau.m.